"If over-population should drive the underdeveloped countries into totalitarianism, and if these new dictatorships should ally themselves with Russia, then the military position of the United States would become less secure and the preparations for defense and retaliation would have to be intensified." Some quotes that I've extracted from this book which ring true for today are: Huxley is basically summarizing the first book in this collection: Brave New World of which was published over 15 years before this one. ![]() How can these authors who write dystopian fiction or social commentaries 30, 40, even 50 years ago be so accurate in what is going on in today's society? This book is no exception. ![]() An essential read, not only to put Brave New World in perspective but to understand the world we live in now.Īuthors such as George Orwell, Margaret Atwood and Aldous Huxley scare me. 63).īrave New World Revisited can probably be read alongside Wilhelm Reich’s Listen, Little Man!, Ortega y Gasset’s La Rebelión de las masas, and even Gilles Deleuze’s essays on the “ société de contrôle”. “A dictatorship, says Huxley, maintains itself by censoring or distorting the facts, and by appealing, not to reason, not to enlightened self-interest, but to passion and prejudice, to the powerful ‘hidden forces’, as Hitler called them, present in the unconscious depth of every human mind.” (p. In this regard, Huxley’s essay is invaluable to help understand a widespread, mostly non-violent, yet totalitarian, style of government. Today’s populist politicians use the same tactics and have the same disdain for honesty and objectivity. ![]() Huxley provides a few - sometimes humorous - insights into our present political situation, by analysing the use of propaganda technology under the Nazi regime, in part inspired by the indoctrination machinery of the Holy Office in earlier times, and in part inherited by the advertisement industry in later times. This is an entirely accurate description of our occidental civilisation, ruled under the vast mass communication networks (TV and the Internet), manipulated in many ways as instruments of conditioning and as social intoxicants. 34).Įssentially, Brave New World depicts a society where power is exerted in the most despotic way, by feeding the people an evolved version of the Romans’ panis et circenses (feelies and orgy-porgy). But how these big controlling powers are expressed in Brave New World is almost the opposite of that of 1984: “In 1984 the lust for power is satisfied by inflicting pain, in Brave New World, by inflicting a hardly less humiliating pleasure.” (p. the control - and even despotism - of “Big Business” and “Big Government” over the whole of society, and the subsequent waning of individual freedom, creativity and happiness. Huxley mainly focuses on two significant problems of our present time: overpopulation and over-organization or “Will to Order”, i.e. Interestingly, Huxley also compares his predictions with that of Orwell’s 1984. What the author is trying to do here is to assess the validity of his novel’s predictions, about the socio-political situation of the 1950s and forward. This book is a small political essay that is just as relevant today as it was at the time of its writing (1958), some twenty-five years after the publication of Huxley’s masterpiece.
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